Los Angeles Times

Trump doubles down

Amazingly, he is again conflating the bigots in Charlottes­ville with those who opposed them.

- T is absolutely

Imind-boggling that President Trump, at a bizarre news conference Tuesday, doubled down on his inexcusabl­e, irresponsi­ble and widely criticized efforts to create a moral equivalenc­y between the behavior of the left and the right in Charlottes­ville over the weekend. Can it really be true that he doesn’t see much difference between Nazis and white supremacis­ts, on the one hand, and their opponents?

Certainly, anyone on the left or the right or anywhere else on the political spectrum who initiated violence at Saturday’s march deserves to be denounced. If the “antifa” counterpro­testers threw the first punches, they were wrong to do so (although that is hardly the same as ramming a car into a crowd).

But Trump — again — missed the bigger point Tuesday, choosing once more to engage in a sort of faux evenhanded­ness by reiteratin­g his claim that the blame falls “on both sides” and that the violence by the altright was matched by that of what he dubbed the “alt-left.” In reality, the core problem in Charlottes­ville was the underlying hate-filled attitudes of the mob carrying Confederat­e battle flags and shouting antiSemiti­c and racist slogans.

Trump needs to understand that racial hatred and intoleranc­e among some of his followers is the enduring problem here. The rally at the center of the skirmishes was called “Unite the Right,” and was intended to defend a statue of Robert E. Lee that the city of Charlottes­ville plans to remove, recognizin­g that it is a memorial to reprehensi­ble beliefs and to the slavery system that has been rightly described as the nation’s original sin. The city apparently recognizes that this is not a chapter of America history to be celebrated or glorified.

At his news conference, Trump made a glib and utterly unpersuasi­ve argument that tearing down a statue of Lee would put the U.S. on a slippery slope to … something. “This week it is Robert E. Lee, and this week Stonewall Jackson,” Trump said. “Is it George Washington next? You have to ask yourself, where does it stop?”

What a ridiculous statement. Can the president really not distinguis­h between Washington and Lee? Washington was a slaveholde­r, to be sure, but that’s not what statues of him celebrate; they recognize him as the nation’s first president, a hero of the Revolution­ary War. Lee, by contrast, left the U.S. Army to lead a rebel force that sought to dismantle the nation in a misguided and unsuccessf­ul attempt to defend the slave system.

The racism displayed by some of Trump’s followers, and by the defenders of memorials to a romanticiz­ed past, is not an issue to be viewed through the usual leftright political prism. It should be viewed through the lens of history. The people who carried the torches through Charlottes­ville and chanted Nazi slogans were commemorat­ing a genocidal ideology. White supremacis­ts reflect the absolute worst part of our the nation’s history, as well as the country’s ongoing inability to bridge in a meaningful and sustainabl­e way the gaps between the races.

The president has been handed several opportunit­ies in the last few days to take a decisive stand against bigotry and hatred, and he has repeatedly declined to do so. He came close on Monday, two days too late, when he read a script denouncing racism that was clearly prepared by staffers putting words in his mouth. But he larded his comments up with self-congratula­tions and irrelevanc­ies before finally denouncing the far right.

And now, sad to say, he has retreated to his original argument that both sides share the blame.

We need as a nation to find a better way through this, and a better way to counter the soul-sickening ideas and beliefs represente­d by the neo-Nazis and racists who have floated on Trump’s tailwind to the main stage of American political discourse.

Unfortunat­ely, we may not receive help from the White House. The Donald Trump we saw and heard Saturday and Tuesday — ignorant, combative, intemperat­e — is the president we elected.

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